Standing Silent Nation

Standing Silent Nation is a 2006 documentary film about Alex White Plume, a resident of South Dakota's Pine Ridge Reservation. After a great deal of research, Alex and his family planted industrial hemp, under the incorrect assumption that tribal sovereignty laws would allow the production of this non-psychoactive relative of marijuana, and the film details the consequences of his actions.[1]

Standing Silent Nation
Directed bySuree Towfighnia
Produced byCourtney Hermann
Edited bySharon Karp
Release date
  • October 27, 2006 (2006-10-27) (Native Voice Film Festival)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Standing Silent Nation was directed by Suree Towfighnia and aired as part of PBS's Point of View series in 2007.

Project funders

Standing Silent Nation is made possible with the support of Native American Public Telecommunications, the Paul Robeson Fund for Independent Media, the Playboy Foundation, and many others who have donated to the project over the years.

Awards

The documentary was awarded Red Nation Film Festival awards for Best Director, Best Producer, and Best Documentary in 2009.[2]

gollark: Probably someone at some point in the chain thought that "rooted = insecure" or something ridiculous like that.
gollark: Oh, and their app wouldn't run on my rooted phone (until I switched to Magisk), which is annoying of them.
gollark: My bank requires *8 to 16* character passwords. And, for their login, requires me to type in specific characters of said passwords, which basically requires writing it down or getting said characters on my computer, which *worsens* security.
gollark: I run Discord in Firefox and it still somehow manages to use hundreds of megabytes of RAM...
gollark: Or I just haven't been exposed to enough internet.

References

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